LmCast :: Stay tuned in

Kia’s flagship EV has a battery problem

Recorded: May 28, 2026, noon

Original Summarized

Kia’s flagship EV has a battery problem | The VergeSkip to main contentThe homepageThe VergeThe Verge logo.The VergeThe Verge logo.TechReviewsScienceEntertainmentAIPolicyNotificationsNotificationsHamburger Navigation ButtonThe homepageThe VergeThe Verge logo.NotificationsNotificationsHamburger Navigation ButtonNavigation DrawerThe VergeThe Verge logo.Login / Sign UpcloseCloseSearchTechExpandAmazonAppleFacebookGoogleMicrosoftSamsungBusinessSee all techReviewsExpandSmart Home ReviewsPhone ReviewsTablet ReviewsHeadphone ReviewsSee all reviewsScienceExpandSpaceEnergyEnvironmentHealthSee all scienceEntertainmentExpandTV ShowsMoviesAudioSee all entertainmentAIExpandOpenAIAnthropicSee all AIPolicyExpandAntitrustPoliticsLawSecuritySee all policyGadgetsExpandLaptopsPhonesTVsHeadphonesSpeakersWearablesSee all gadgetsVerge ShoppingExpandBuying GuidesDealsGift GuidesSee all shoppingGamingExpandXboxPlayStationNintendoSee all gamingStreamingExpandDisneyHBONetflixYouTubeCreatorsSee all streamingTransportationExpandElectric CarsAutonomous CarsRide-sharingScootersSee all transportationFeaturesVerge VideoExpandTikTokYouTubeInstagramPodcastsExpandDecoderThe VergecastVersion HistoryNewslettersArchivesStoreVerge Product UpdatesSubscribeFacebookThreadsInstagramYoutubeRSSThe VergeThe Verge logo.Kia’s flagship EV has a battery problemNotificationsNotificationsComments DrawerNotificationsCommentsLoading commentsGetting the conversation ready...ReportCloseReportPosts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.FollowFollowSee All ReportTransportationCloseTransportationPosts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.FollowFollowSee All TransportationCarsCloseCarsPosts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.FollowFollowSee All CarsKia’s flagship EV has a battery problemThe EV9 has a big battery that’s proving to be unreliable.by Tom WarrenCloseTom WarrenSenior CorrespondentPosts from this author will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.FollowFollowSee All by Tom WarrenMay 28, 2026, 12:00 PM UTCLinkShareGift Image: KiaReportCloseReportPosts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.FollowFollowSee All ReportTransportationCloseTransportationPosts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.FollowFollowSee All TransportationCarsCloseCarsPosts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.FollowFollowSee All CarsKia’s flagship EV has a battery problemThe EV9 has a big battery that’s proving to be unreliable.by Tom WarrenCloseTom WarrenSenior CorrespondentPosts from this author will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.FollowFollowSee All by Tom WarrenMay 28, 2026, 12:00 PM UTCLinkShareGiftTom WarrenCloseTom WarrenPosts from this author will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.FollowFollowSee All by Tom Warren is a senior correspondent and author of Notepad, who has been covering all things Microsoft, PC, and tech for over 20 years.I first realized there was an issue with Kia’s flagship EV9 when I tried to unlock my car last year. The hulking three-row SUV was sitting on my driveway completely dead. The key didn’t work, the app connection to the car was gone, and I was already late to an appointment. Luckily, I had prepared for such a scenario, after reading about widespread 12-volt battery issues with the EV9.I managed to open the car with the manual key that Kia supplies and access the frunk to reach the 12V battery and use a booster I had purchased to jolt it back to life. Like many ICE cars, a 12V battery powers most of the low-voltage electrical systems in a vehicle, so when it dies, the vehicle is rendered useless. I called my local Kia dealership to report the problem. I was prepared for the 12V battery issues, but I wasn’t prepared for what happened next.A few weeks after Kia had run software updates to address the 12V battery issue, I started to notice weird charging issues with my EV9. Every time I tried to charge past 80 percent, the car would jump from 82 percent to 100 percent on my home AC charger, as if it had miraculously instantly charged that last 18 percent. I also noticed the range of the car had gone down significantly at 100 percent charge, making it difficult to complete some longer journeys without having to charge again.It seemed like a battery problem, the type of issue I’ve read so many people posting about on EV9 owner groups on Facebook. I reported the problem to Kia and they weren’t able to initially replicate it until I was able to record the issue on my phone while charging on a fast DC charger. The car would drop to a 0kW charge rate at 82 percent and take about 10 minutes to fake its way to 100 percent without the estimated range of the car ever changing.After watching a variety of YouTube videos, I purchased an On-Board Diagnostics (OBD) scanner to plug into the car to retrieve more information about the battery. OBD II scanners let you see the amount of remaining energy in a battery pack at its current state of charge, as well as read the voltage levels across individual cells of an EV battery.The EV9 has a modular battery pack that has been highly praised by engineering consulting firm Munro & Associates. It has 38 individual modules that can be replaced, making it easier for technicians to complete repairs. With the OBD II scanner, I could see that at 100 percent charge I only had 71kWh, whereas I should have had around 96kWh usable of the 99.8kWh battery. That meant I was missing 25 percent of the battery and in turn 25 percent of range. I could also see that some battery cells were dead and not holding a charge, but the car was still working and there were no errors or problems charging up to 82 percent.After a couple of diagnostic sessions, my local Kia dealer eventually came to the conclusion that the main high-voltage battery pack was faulty and would need to be replaced. Instead of leaving it at the garage for a week or two, I entered into Kia’s battery repair program, which has no ETA and is part of the eight-year warranty cover that Kia provides for EV batteries in the UK.The wait for a new battery can be as long as nine monthsI soon learned after talking to more than a dozen EV9 owners in the UK that the wait could be as long as nine months for a battery fix, the amount of time it takes to create another future passenger for the back seats. Unlike some EV9 owners I’ve been speaking to, I’ve been able to continue using my car until Kia was ready to fix it. Some EV9 owners have had similar issues to mine, where the car stops charging at a certain percentage and the range nosedives. Others have had the battery pack totally fail or seen the range plummet to only 30 miles, making their cars unusable.Kasem Saowijit described his EV9 battery failure issues as a “nightmare” in messages to The Verge. His EV9 failed in January and his local garage has provided a smaller EV6 as a courtesy car while he waits an undetermined amount of time for his car’s return. “Kia are absolutely pathetic, no update with a chase, and when I do get an update it’s a pointless update,” says Saowijit. His EV9 is only a year old, and he says he’s now wasting hundreds of pounds a month on a car lease he can’t use.Saowijit isn’t alone with the frustrations over Kia customer service. “My car has stayed at the dealership and it’s not moved in five months,” explains EV9 owner Helen Crawforth in a message. Crawforth has also been provided a courtesy car, but it’s an ICE car that she says is “costing me a fortune.”Blair Ogilvie first started having issues with his EV9 in September 2024. “The first issue was a 12V battery issue,” he says in a message. Months later, just like me, he started having problems with the main high-voltage battery not charging properly and the range of his EV9 dropping dramatically. The battery eventually failed further in December and dropped to around 80 miles of range, causing “other systems to fail including the crash avoidance system.” Ogilvie tells me Kia said the car was unsafe to drive, and his EV9 has been off the road since December with no ETA on a fix.The stories of the more than a dozen EV9 owners I’ve spoken to are all very similar and point to a Kia that is struggling with battery replacements on its flagship EV. But the problems for Kia and Hyundai EVs go even deeper. The sibling brands, operating under the Hyundai Motor Group, have each suffered a variety of issues with Integrated Charging Control Unit (ICCU) failures in recent years across the Ioniq 5, EV6, and other models. An ICCU failure can cause a car to lose power while driving, which is an incredibly dangerous problem to have.Hyundai and Kia have both started to issue warranty extensions around the world for affected vehicles in recent weeks, after remaining mostly silent on the issues for years. The change of heart came months after Consumer Reports highlighted in February that up to 10 percent of Hyundai and Kia EV owners experienced ICCU-related issues, depending on the model and model year.Corbin, who runs The Ioniq Guy YouTube channel and goes by a singular name, has been covering the ICCU failures closely before his own Ioniq 5 had a battery issue last fall. “What you are experiencing with your car is exactly what I experienced with my Ioniq 5,” says Corbin in an email to The Verge. “They replaced the battery within two weeks, which seemed to be due to preferential treatment as others were waiting many months.” Hyundai then loaned Corbin an Ioniq 5 press car while his personal vehicle was being fixed, and it suffered the same failure. ”Hyundai knew about the issue with the cells early in 2025 and released a technical service bulletin instructing dealers to replace the failed packs that showed the related trouble code,” says Corbin. Kia hasn’t released a similar bulletin for the EV9 yet, and my local dealer struggled to find an obvious error code for the problems I’ve been experiencing.EV9 owners in the US are also facing similar battery issues, but messages on Facebook owner groups suggest that wait times are slightly better than across the Atlantic. “Wait times might have decreased but at least anecdotally I’ve heard it can still be months,” says Corbin.I reached out to Kia PR in the UK about the battery issues with the EV9 and general ICCU problems in late March. After initially responding in March about a potential statement, Kia UK PR ignored my repeated requests for comment earlier this month.Two days after chasing Kia UK PR for the first time since March, my local dealer phoned to say my car was suddenly ready to be repaired. My EV9 is now sitting in an industrial unit nearly 100 miles away, and I’m still not sure when I’ll get it back. Kia has loaned me a much smaller EV3 for my growing family in the meantime, a vehicle that has also been plagued with ICCU issues over the past 18 months.Before Kia’s ICCU issues, the brand was also hit by a pandemic-era car theft problem. Thieves calling themselves “the Kia boys” posted videos on TikTok and other social media platforms with instructions on how to steal Kia cars, often with just a USB cable. The absence of electronic immobilizers on many Hyundai and Kia vehicles manufactured between 2015 and 2019 led to both brands rolling out software updates to prevent thefts. It’s not clear if Kia and Hyundai can address its ICCU and battery problems with software this time, though.If you’re experiencing similar issues with your Hyundai or Kia EV — whether it’s an unexplained loss of range, charging problems, or strange battery behavior — it’s worth taking the time to scan your vehicle with an OBD II reader and check the health of the high-voltage battery yourself. There are plenty of easy-to-follow guides available, and the data can reveal problems long before a dealership acknowledges them. The more owners who document these failures, the harder it becomes for Hyundai Motor Group to ignore what looks like a growing battery failure issue.Follow topics and authors from this story to see more like this in your personalized homepage feed and to receive email updates.Tom WarrenCloseTom WarrenSenior CorrespondentPosts from this author will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.FollowFollowSee All by Tom WarrenCarsCloseCarsPosts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.FollowFollowSee All CarsReportCloseReportPosts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.FollowFollowSee All ReportTransportationCloseTransportationPosts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.FollowFollowSee All TransportationMost PopularMost PopularValve raises Steam Deck prices by more than $200Sony’s first RGB TV is a statement pieceSony is offering up to 50 percent off some of our favorite PS5 gamesHere’s how Google is responding to Fitbit users who don’t like the new Health appWin cool gadgets we can’t keep because The Verge has ethicsThe Verge DailyA free daily digest of the news that matters most.Email (required)Sign UpBy submitting your email, you agree to our Terms and Privacy Notice. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.Advertiser Content FromThis is the title for the native adMore in ReportThe golden age of handheld gaming is already overThe Pope isn’t AGI-pilledNobody wants to tell me why they only listen to their own Suno slopAI warfare is already hereWhy Nuro thinks being a robotaxi ‘second mover’ gives it an advantageThe man behind the legendary MPC, Roger Linn, stays focused with a single browser tabThe golden age of handheld gaming is already overSean Hollister6:30 AM UTCThe Pope isn’t AGI-pilledHayden FieldMay 27Nobody wants to tell me why they only listen to their own Suno slopTerrence O'BrienMay 26AI warfare is already hereHayden FieldMay 26Why Nuro thinks being a robotaxi ‘second mover’ gives it an advantageAndrew J. HawkinsMay 24The man behind the legendary MPC, Roger Linn, stays focused with a single browser tabTerrence O'BrienMay 23Advertiser Content FromThis is the title for the native adTop Stories6:30 AM UTCThe golden age of handheld gaming is already overMay 27Roids were all the rage at the Enhanced GamesMay 27Sony’s first RGB TV is a statement pieceMay 27Here’s how Google is responding to Fitbit users who don’t like the new Health appMay 27The AI fight brewing inside The New York Times14 seconds agoThey’ve finally made the Oura Ring smaller and lighterThe VergeThe Verge logo.FacebookThreadsInstagramYoutubeRSSContactTip UsCommunity GuidelinesArchivesAboutEthics StatementHow We Rate and Review ProductsCookie SettingsTerms of UsePrivacy NoticeCookie PolicyLicensing FAQAccessibilityPlatform Status© 2026 Vox Media, LLC. All Rights ReservedNotifications DrawerThe VergeThe Verge logo.Sign in to see your notifications or create an account to join the conversation.Sign in

Kia's flagship electric vehicle, the EV9, has been plagued by reliability issues stemming from problems with its battery system. One owner experienced an initial failure with the low-voltage 12-volt battery, which rendered the vehicle inoperable, necessitating external intervention to restore power. Following software updates intended to address these low-voltage issues, the owner encountered more complex problems related to charging behavior, including spontaneous jumps in the state of charge and a noticeable decrease in overall vehicle range when fully charged. This led to suspicions of a broader battery problem, which the owner documented by using an on-board diagnostic scanner to investigate the system. The scanner revealed discrepancies, indicating that the vehicle was missing a significant portion of its advertised battery capacity, and demonstrated that some battery cells were non-functional, despite the vehicle still operating up to eighty-two percent charge without immediate error messages.

Subsequent diagnostics led the local Kia dealership to conclude that the main high-voltage battery pack was faulty and required replacement. The owner entered Kia's battery repair program under the eight-year warranty, although this process has resulted in extremely long waiting periods, with some reports indicating waits of up to nine months for a replacement. Other EV9 owners have shared similar experiences, detailing issues ranging from range nosedives and charging stoppages to complete battery pack failures, which has led some to view the experience as a "nightmare" regarding customer service and repairs.

These specific problems are compounded by broader issues within the Hyundai Motor Group, as the sibling brands have also faced issues with Integrated Charging Control Unit failures across models like the Ioniq 5 and EV6. An ICCU failure is particularly dangerous, as it can cause a vehicle to lose power while in motion. While the battery issues for the EV9 have been reported, the broader ICCU concerns suggest systemic issues that have surfaced recently. Following reports from Consumer Reports, warranty extensions have been implemented by Hyundai and Kia in response to these concerns. One observer noted that when one vehicle experienced an ICCU failure, the replacement process was expedited, while others faced protracted delays.

While Kia has not yet released a corresponding technical service bulletin for the EV9 battery troubles, the experience of owners—such as Kasem Saowijit, who reported his EV9 battery failure, and others like Helen Crawforth and Blair Ogilvie—suggests a collective struggle regarding battery replacements and communication from the manufacturer. The absence of clear updates and the difficulty dealerships face in identifying specific error codes further contribute to owner frustration. Furthermore, the brand has previously dealt with car theft issues related to a lack of electronic immobilizers in certain models manufactured between 2015 and 2019, which led to software updates; it remains unclear if current software updates can effectively resolve the ongoing battery and ICCU problems. Owners experiencing similar symptoms are advised to use an OBD II reader to assess the high-voltage battery health themselves, as documentation of these failures can help pressure the manufacturer to address the underlying issues.